ThinkProgress Logo

NEWS FLASH

Republican Congressman Dodges CNN Cameras To Avoid Answering Questions About Ethics Probe | Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-FL) — who is currently under at least “four congressional and federal investigations“– dodged CNN cameras as he sought to avoid answering questions about allegations that he tired to tamper with a witness in a Federal Election Commission investigation. Buchanan, in charge of fundraising for the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee, is suspected of orchestrating a cash-swap deals in which he pressured employees of his car dealerships to donate to his Congressional campaigns and later reimbursed them for their contributions. Once the charges came to light, Buchanan allegedly tried to pressure the central witness in the investigation, a former business partner, to sign a false affidavit stating that the congressman was not aware of the deals. Watch as Buchanan dodges questions about the matter:

NEWS FLASH

POLL: Only 1/3 Of Americans Know Obama Is A Christian | Just one in three Americans “can correctly identify President Obama as a Christian, according to a new Gallup poll,” down substantially from 2008. Forty-four percent now say they don’t know Obama’s religion and 11% (or 18% of Republicans) say he is a Muslim. A 2008 poll from Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that 10% of voters thought Obama was a Muslim, while 53% said he is a Christian. Results from the latest Gallup poll:

NEWS FLASH

Number Of People Living In Extreme Poverty Up 50% Since 2000 | Economics blogger Evan Soltas broke down census figures and found that since 2000, the number of people living in “extreme” poverty — that is, incomes totaling less than half of the federal poverty line — has climbed an astounding 50 percent, accelerating most dramatically after the recession began four years ago. In 2010, 6.7 percent of Americans were living in extreme poverty, up from 5.2 percent in 2007 and just 4.7 percent in 2000. That represents the largest jump by a single income bracket among those hovering near the poverty line.

Economy

Romney’s Bain Profited Even As The Companies It Invested In Went Bankrupt, Analysis Reveals

Mitt Romney has argued that his business experience as head of Bain Capital from 1984 to 1999 will help him turnaround the economy, reduce the debt and place the nation on a sustainable economic footing. In fact, Romney’s years in the private sector are the centerpiece of his presidential campaign and a way for the candidate to distinguish himself from President Obama.

“Twenty five years in business, including business with other nations, competing with companies across the world, has given me an understanding of what it is that makes America a good place to grow and add jobs, and why jobs leave America – why businesses decide to locate here, and why they decide to locate somewhere else,” the former Massachusetts governor told TIME’s Mark Halperin last month. “I happen to believe that having been in the private sector for twenty-five years gives me a perspective on how jobs are created – that someone who’s never spent a day in the private sector, like President Obama, simply doesn’t understand.”

But that business record has come under attack, first from Romney’s opponents in the Republican presidential primary and later from the Obama campaign — all of whom claimed that Bain focused more on increasing profits than creating jobs. Now, a New York Times analysis reveals that the private equity firm made money even as the companies it invested in went bankrupt and employees lost their jobs and livelihoods:

The private equity firm, co-founded and run by Mitt Romney, held a majority stake in more than 40 United States-based companies from its inception in 1984 to early 1999, when Mr. Romney left Bain to lead the Salt Lake City Olympics. Of those companies, at least seven eventually filed for bankruptcy while Bain remained involved, or shortly afterward, according to a review by The New York Times. In some instances, hundreds of employees lost their jobs. In most of those cases, however, records and interviews suggest that Bain and its executives still found a way to make money. [...]

Bain structured deals so that it was difficult for the firm and its executives to ever really lose, even if practically everyone else involved with the company that Bain owned did, including its employees, creditors and even, at times, investors in Bain’s funds. [...]

In four of the seven Bain-owned companies that went bankrupt, Bain investors also profited, amassing more than $400 million in gains before the companies ran aground, The Times found. All four, however, later became mired in debt incurred, at least in part, to repay Bain investors or to carry out a Bain-led acquisition strategy.

On Thursday, the Washington Post reported that Bain also invested extensively in companies that moved jobs overseas to low-wage countries like China. The practice contradicts the rhetoric of candidate Romney, who since announcing his presidential ambitions, has criticized government policies that have led to jobs, particularly those in manufacturing, moving offshore.

Climate Progress

What Role Did Climate Change Play In Epic Duluth Floods?

by Andrew Freedman, via Climate Central

As the people of Duluth, Minn. — a community of about 86,000 tucked away at the southwest corner of Lake Superior — try to recover from the record flooding of the past week, it’s reasonable for them to ask whether global warming may have played a role in the floodwaters that so heavily damaged their city.

A car partially swallowed by floodwaters in Duluth. Credit: NWS

Given the unusual nature of the rainfall, and the prevalence of extreme weather in Minnesota and other states so far this year and during recent decades, the answer, according to the scientific evidence, is “maybe.” (That the jury is still out is reason enough for concern.).

Here are some of the facts regarding the unprecedented and devastating flooding event that took place this week in Duluth. A cold front sparked slow-moving thunderstorms that repeatedly moved over the Duluth area between June 17-19, dumping between 8 and 10 inches of rain in a 24-to 36-hour period on Duluth and neighboring communities in Minnesota and Wisconsin.

An all-time record 24-hour rainfall was set in Duluth, with 7.24 inches of rain falling during that period. The rainfall came during an already wet month in Minnesota, as the state rapidly lurched from drought conditions during the spring to suddenly having a precipitation surplus.

The rainfall washed out numerous roads in the Duluth metro area and nearby counties, and a state of emergency was declared in the city. The heavy rains caused rapid increases in the levels of local rivers and creeks. The St. Louis River at Scanlon, Minn., crested at an all-time record high of 16.62 feet on June 21, up from 5.5 feet just two days prior.

In other words, this was not your ordinary heavy downpour, and the flooding the rains caused were not your typical floods, either. It’s likely that the flooding will go down as among the most destructive in Duluth’s history.

The U.S. Climate Extremes Index, showing an increase in 1-day precipitation extremes in recent years across the Lower-48 states. Credit: NCDC.

It’s been well documented that global warming is already contributing to an increase in the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere, and an increase in the number of heavy precipitation events across large parts of the globe. A 2008 report from the U.S. Climate Change Science Program found that there has been a 31 percent increase in very heavy precipitation events from 1958 through 2007 in the Upper Midwest.

As Paul Huttner of Minnesota Public Radio wrote: “What we can credibly say and support with facts is that events like the Great Duluth Flood of 2012 ‘fit’ within the overall pattern of climate changes we’re observing in Minnesota.”

Some recent studies that have assessed global warming’s relative contribution to specific extreme precipitation events have shown that by putting more moisture into the air, global warming made them more likely to occur.

Given the studies showing changes already occurring in the planet’s water cycle as a result of global warming, it’s quite possible that global warming aided and abetted the extreme rainfall event such as the one that occurred in Duluth by making more moisture available for the thunderstorms to wring out of the air as heavy rainfall.

Read more

Politics

On Anniversary Of Title IX, Sec. Sebelius Says: Budget Cutbacks ‘Shouldn’t Mean Rolling Back Equality For Women’

This Saturday marks the 40th anniversary of Title IX, a gender equality in education effort from the 1970s. At an event at the Center for American Progress, Health and Human Services Sec. Kathleen Sebelius acknowledged the country still has a long way to go before it achieves true gender parity.

Sebelius spoke about the huge progress achieved in 40 years toward a more balanced education system, particularly in the world of sports. But she also noted that women still face some discrimination, both in how they are currently treated at schools, and how they may be de-prioritized because of underlying sexism:

We know that women still get fewer opportunities to play sports in high school and college, fewer scholarship dollars, and often settle for very inferior facilities and equipment. And especially in challenging times, we need to make sure budget cutbacks don’t mean rolling back the equality that’s been achieved for women. But as we acknowledge the challenges ahead, we need to celebrate how far we’ve come.

Watch it:

Women are still lagging behind educationally in some areas, particularly in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM programs). Currently, women hold far fewer STEM degrees — only 17.9 percent of computer science degrees go to women — and are only 24 percent of the STEM workforce.

And Sebelius is right that women’s programs are targeted in budget cuts. Since women tend to be marginalized and under-represented in politics, programs that benefit women are too often the first on the chopping block. Rep. Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) budget, for example, slashes education, nutrition, and health care assistance for women.

Climate Progress

The Rage Of A Dying Dinosaur: Coal’s Decline In The U.S.

by RL Miller, via Daily Kos

A dinosaur backed into a corner by a pack of smaller dinosaurs may be mortally wounded, but it’s big and angry enough to do some serious damage in its death throes. The coal industry, long accustomed to being the Tyrannosaurus Rex of American politics, is on the ropes, battered by forces outside its control, but angry enough to damage people while it searches for an escape route.

Long term use of coal in the US is declining: “The share of U.S. electricity that comes from coal is forecast to fall below 40% for the year, its lowest level since World War II. Four years ago, it was 50%. By the end of this decade, it is likely to be near 30%.”

Coal’s decline is widely attributed to three reasons, which I’ve cleverly named EPA — Environmental Protection Agency, Price, Activists. One is far less important than the other two.

Congressional Republicans blame the EPA, but every time I’ve looked at “EPA regulations force this coal plant shutdown” cries, I’ve found a decrepit old plant shut down most months because maintenance costs are too high. EPA regulations are a relatively minor factor in coal plant shutdowns.

Most business analysts attribute coal’s fall to price. Coal’s price in the United States has stayed fairly stable, but prices of alternatives have plummeted. Natgas is at $2.50/MBTU – it was $9-10 during Bush years. Utilities are actively planning to replace older coal fired plants to natural gas. Things are so bad for Old King Coal that it’s fighting with two of its usual strong allies.

The electric utilities, formerly joined at the hip with coal, are now bailing on coal:

many now recognize that expending the political capital to fight for plants built in the middle of last century is not worth it — especially when they can construct combined cycle natural gas facilities with relative regulatory ease while releasing roughly half of the emissions in the meantime.

A perfect storm is pulling the coal sector under:

Read more

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up